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Authors: Reavis Z Wortham

BOOK: Dark Places
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Chapter Sixteen

Cody went downstairs to find Deputy Anna Sloan sitting at his desk. She was on the phone and wiggled her fingers in a wave. “Yes ma'am, I understand. You said they had cash with them? How much?”

She listened, using one finger to absently move her pillbox uniform hat in a tiny circle on the nearly empty desk. Cody hung his wet Stetson on the hat tree and shifted uncertainly. He wanted to work through the growing stack of papers on the corner of the desk, but couldn't ask her to get up while she was on the phone. Hands in his pockets, he walked to the window and stared at the wet parking lot.

As she talked, he heard genuine concern in her voice. It was refreshing to have someone on staff who could relate to women in the course of an investigation. She filled a hole that was evident the day he took office. He needed to break up the men's club.

Judge O.C. Rains convinced the city council to appoint Cody Parker as interim sheriff after Sheriff Griffin's betrayal and death, knowing full well that come election time in May, Cody would be a shoe-in for the job. Cody in turn put the ex-sheriff's driver, Deputy White, back on the street before wading through dozens of applications to find someone with good investigative skills.

Anna's was the only one that stood out in a pile of applications filled out by men. He knew that hiring a woman was breaking dangerous ground, but he needed someone with experience in detail work to dig through facts and information to solve cases.

Anna came highly recommended from the Harris County Sheriff's Department in Houston where she'd broken half a dozen cases that stalled for one reason or another. When Cody asked her over the phone why she wanted to leave a promising career in the big city, she chuckled. “I'm tired of the humidity. It makes my hair swell.”

Cody laughed. “All right. I'll get back to you tomorrow.” He hung up and went straight home that night to talk it over with his redheaded wife, Norma Faye.

It was full dark when he arrived. She was setting the table after he washed up and joined her in the kitchen. “What would you think if I hired a woman deputy?”

“Is she pretty?”

“She's not hard to look at in the mugshot she sent with her application.”

“Why a woman?”

“Because y'all pay more attention to the little details that men miss. I have enough hairy-legged boys to do most of the work, but I need somebody who'll stay at it until they catch what the rest don't see or think about.”

“Why are you asking
me
?”

“Because folks will talk for one thing, especially after the way we got together. Even though we're married and she ain't my type, some will wonder what I'm up to since she's the first female deputy we'll ever have in the department.”

Norma Faye stopped setting the table. “When you first started talking about needing people, I thought you were hiring a secretary, or someone else for dispatch. I never thought of a woman deputy.”

“See? We may be riding alone sometimes. We might work nights. I may talk about her a lot, and I don't want you to get the wrong idea or to feel uncomfortable. I don't care about anybody but you.”

“Idiot.” She gave him a quick kiss. “I'll never be jealous, but you watch yourself with everyone else.”

Relieved, Cody sat down to eat. “I'm crazy about you.”

“I know.”

Anna's tone dropped on the phone as she sympathized with the person on the other end of the line. “We'll do our best, but right now the investigation hasn't turned up anything that'll tell us where they are. I'll call you again in a day or two. All right, bye.” She hung up and realized where she was. “Oh! Sorry.” She hopped up and came around the desk.

“Don't worry about it.” They traded places and Cody settled into the chair. He slid her little hat toward the edge. “Who was that? You find anything out?”

“Not a thing.” She unconsciously smoothed her skirt. “That was the Dallas police. All they have is background information. Those missing businessmen drove out a few days ago. They were at the motel here in town one minute and vanished the next. The night manager said he remembers seeing their car pass by about dark and turn toward town, but that's all we know right now.”

“They have family?”

“I'm sure they do, but they weren't married. Dallas is handling that end.”

“So what's your plan?”

“I'm going over to the Ramada Inn and start there. Maybe I'll get an idea of where they might have gone or who might have seen them if I drive around.”

“All right, let me know if you find anything out.”

She secured the hat with a bobby pin. “Sure thing. Tootles.”

The radio crackled. “Sheriff Parker, come in.”

He lifted the handset. “Right here, John.”

“Sheriff, we have a situation on the square.”

“What's that?”

“There's some kids out there having a demonstration.”

“In the rain?”

“Yep. I was driving past and saw 'em sittin' out there under umbrellas, holding signs about Viet Nam and peace this and peace that. I prob'ly don't need to handle thissun alone. They all look like you, not me.”

It was John's way of saying they were white kids. Cody grinned at the rain as it fell harder. He checked the clock and saw it was six o'clock. “How many are there?”

“A dozen or so high school kids, but there are a couple of older ones, too. Probably the ones that thunk it all up. We gonna do something about it?”

“Nope. Go on home, John, and tell Rachel howdy. If they want to have a sit-in out in the rain, then let 'em. They'll give up before long.”

Chapter Seventeen

“John T. West is for sure after us.”

A shiver ran down Pepper's spine. “I was afraid of that.”

Rain dripped off the eaves of the Baptist church not twenty yards from Cale's house. “He was asking around about you.”

In his living room, Cale checked over his shoulder to make sure no one was listening in on their phone conversation. He spoke softly, because his own daddy sometimes had ears like a bird dog. He was pretty sure the reverend was in the church with a couple of ladies planning the upcoming Thanksgiving celebration, but he wasn't taking any chances.

“Sammy Dollins was there and heard John T. ask how many grandkids your granddaddy had.”

Sitting at the telephone table in Miss Becky's living room, Pepper cupped the mouthpiece and barely whispered, even though her grandmother was outside, sweeping off the porch. “Maybe it's our imaginations. We didn't see anything but them going past.”

“We know that, but they don't.”

“What do you think they were doing?”

“I think it has something to with Leland Hale getting run over.”

“Grandpa would have said something about that if he thought it was John T. or Marty. Him and Uncle Cody went over to Marty's house that day and I know good and well they would have checked Marty's truck. They've been watching every car and truck that's gone through Center Springs.”

“You don't know for sure, though. Maybe that Impala hit Mr. Leland.” Cale thought for a moment, wondering if the timing was right. He finally decided it was. “Let's go to California. I don't want John T. after me for any reason, and if we're gone, we won't have anything to worry about. You wanted to go. Now's the time to do it.”

In a teenage moment of absurd rationality, she decided that running away was the best option. Butterflies filled her stomach when
It
was said, the thing she'd been talking about and leading up to for months. She couldn't run away alone, but Cale made it possible.

“Yep. That's how you do it. You don't announce it to anyone, you just split.” She shivered. “San Francisco, here we come.”

Chapter Eighteen

Anna started the engine, put the patrol car in gear, and pulled out of the courthouse parking lot. One of the other deputies pulled in at the same time and waved a finger when he saw the car. Then he shook his head and laughed, and Anna wondered if he was laughing at
her
.

It didn't bother her that much. She'd been in law enforcement for ten years, and dealt with her share of sexist comments and arrogant men. In Houston, it had taken three years before most of them gave up and treated her like one of their own.

There were a couple, though, who had to learn the hard way. One wouldn't keep his hands to himself one night after work in the parking lot, when he cupped her breast and squeezed like he was checking a cantaloupe for ripeness. After the cast came off his little finger, he absently rubbed it every time they passed each other in the station.

The other one was her partner, an old-school deputy who believed women belonged in the bedroom and kitchen. They rode together for two years and she endured a daily ration of ill treatment until the day she solved the murder of a ten-year-old child whose abused body was dumped beside a Houston bayou. When they arrested a local preacher for the crime, and he confessed to the murder, her partner never said another word again.

The ten-year-old had been his granddaughter.

Anna took the back way to the Ramada Inn because she wanted to start fresh in her thinking. Her idea of retracing the businessmen's routes came from those first couple of weeks in town when she knew no one and needed something to do in the evenings.

The rain increased still again as she parked near the motel's swimming pool in the middle of a large L. She watched rain dimple the surface of the heavily chlorinated water that was usually full of kids and parents. Then she pulled away.

The Motorola squawked with cop talk, most of it about car accidents and rising water. She drove down Highway 271, and under the loop's overpass. She passed the bowling alley, not knowing that one of Ned's cousins had come close to dying in the parking lot a year earlier, when his wife's boyfriend knocked him in the head with a crowbar. It was one of the hundreds of stories folks in Chisum and Center Springs knew about, but didn't discuss.

On an impulse, she stopped at the bowling alley for the second time since moving to Chisum. That first week, she bowled one game, but then realizing it was more fun with others, picked up a greasy cheeseburger in the coffee shop and left to eat it in her rented house. Anna occupied the next few nights by unpacking her few possessions, finding the right position for the rabbit ears antenna on her portable television, shopping at the Woolworth, Duke & Ayres, and Bealls, and going to the movies at the Plaza and Grand Theaters, both downtown, within two hundred yards of each other.

Inside, the noisy Bowl-a-Rama assaulted her senses with the familiar smells of popcorn, sweaty socks, the rumble of rolling balls on hard maple lanes, the solid crack of scattering pins, and the clunk of the new machinery resetting them for the next roll.

Harold Hollis was spraying disinfectant into shoes when Anna stepped up to the counter. “Is it Halloween?”

She frowned. “Excuse me?”

He gave her a long inspection, from the uniform cap bobby-pinned to her hair, to her blouse, and the skirt ending above her knees. “You're dressed up for something and I wondered if it was Halloween.”

Her ears flushed with rising heat. “It's time for you to drop that crap and talk to me, that's what time it is.” She pointed at the badge over her left breast, wishing she could wear it somewhere else. “I'm Deputy Anna Sloan, and I'm here to investigate a murder.”

Harold put the shoes down and patted the air between them. “Keep your voice down. There ain't been no murders in here, and my customers don't want to hear anything like that.”

Anna had to force the smile off her face. It didn't take much to back some fools down. She spoke softly, forcing Harold to mirror her actions over the counter. She was far enough back that it was uncomfortable for him, and that made her feel even better. “I didn't say it happened here. I'm working on a case involving two businessmen from Dallas.”

The manager waited. “Okay?”

She held out a black and white photo that had been delivered from Dallas, a two-and-a-half-hour drive away. “Were these men in here?”

He studied the likeness. “Nope.”

“You're sure?”

“I might not know shit from Shinola, but I'd recognize the noses on those two if they came in.” His eyes slipped from Anna's face to her chest. “Ain't seen 'em.”

“Hey, up here.” When Harold's eyes rose, she continued. “Maybe you weren't working if they did and there's somebody else I could talk to.”

“I open and I close. There ain't nobody works this counter but me. Bowling alleys run on a tight margin. Hell, I had to shell out a butt-load of money for them new pin setters so I didn't have to hire and feed a bunch of kids that wouldn't show up for work. Now it's me, Mary on the snack counter, and Slim back there on the grill, but I ain't never seen these two.”

Deflated, Anna gave up. “All right, but if you hear anything, you call the sheriff's department.”

“All right, missy.”

She paused. “Answer me this, if a male deputy came in here, would you call him buddy, or feller, or bub?”

Harold raised an eyebrow in surprise, wondering at the question. “Nope.”

“All right. That's good to know. Now, the next time I'm in here and you call me missy, I'm going to stick one of those size thirteen bowling shoes up your ass, got that, bub?”

Shocked that a woman would speak to him in such a way, Harold gaped like a fish out of water as she spun on her heel and stomped back into the rain. Anna had to sit in the car for a few minutes to cool off before pulling back into the light flow of traffic.

Chapter Nineteen

Ned pulled into the bottle-cap lot in front of Neal Box's store in Center Springs. The Spit and Whittle Club was on the porch and out of the incessant rain. A few trucks were parked in front of Oak Peterson's store, less than fifty yards away. Ned figured some were there to pick up staples such as bread or salt, and the others were folks getting their mail from the post office in the back. Oak was smart enough to know that most people preferred Neal's store, but he stayed in business because of the post office. He'd located it at the rear, though, so they would have to pass all his wares on their way in and out.

Between the two small businesses, the door to the domino hall was open and a soft light made the one-room building inviting.

Ned joined the loafers on the porch. Ty Cobb and Jimmy Foxx leaned against the wall in straight-back chairs on two legs, their muddy feet stretched out. “I swear, it's a risin' like nobody's business.”

Rain dripped off the roof well away from the two-by-six porch railings they used as seats. Ned settled on one with his back to the highway. “What is?”

“The lake.” Jimmy Foxx motioned toward the south. “We was down on the south end, huntin' coons on the creek when Ty Cobb damn near drowned.”

“Aw, I didn't come close to drowning, but we was running a branch down there that we've hunted for years. When I went lopin' over a little rise in the dark, I wound up swimming.”

The men laughed. Isaac Reader, Neal Box, Wayne Simpson, Dub Hinkley, and Mike Parsons all loved a good hunting story, and none of them ever let the facts get in the way of telling it.

“Shoot, I know that trail like I know the back of my hand, and I'm a tellin' you, the water is comin' up so fast in them sloughs that you can watch it eat up the ground. I had to dog paddle back to the rise and Jimmy Foxx hauled me in like a big old gar. It won't be long before the creek gets out of the banks.”

Mike Parsons leaned forward to speak. He always leaned into a conversation. “It's fillin' up faster than they want. There's a steady stream of heavy equipment coming up out of the bottoms. They ain't even finished with burning up all the trees, but if they don't get their rigs out pretty soon, they'll be underwater the way it's comin' down.”

“I came over a while ago,” Ned said. With the completion of the dam, there were now two ways to get to Center Springs off the highway running between Chisum and Hugo, in Oklahoma. The original two-lane road came from Arthur City, and now the cutoff across the dam originated in Powderly, about two miles south of the Texas/Oklahoma border. “All the fires are out and there ain't but a couple of draglines left. They're having to pull one out with a bulldozer.”

“Yep, they've beat the ground up so much that's it's boggy from all this rain.” Dub rubbed his three-day old whiskers. “The creek's up seven or eight feet, which ain't much down there in that big hole, but it'll be a sight deeper if it don't clear off soon.”

“Listen. Listen. They say it's gonna rain for another week, at least.” Isaac Reader cleaned under his fingernails with a pocket knife. It always made Ned nervous to watch him do that, because Ike's knives were sharp enough to shave with, and the jerky little farmer seemed to work way too deep under his nails.

Mike Parsons crossed his arms. “Hell, Ike, they don't know for sure. I can guess as good as the weatherman can.”

“So what do
you
think, then?”

Mike scratched his head. “I think it's gonna rain for another week.”

More laughter. A dented Pontiac Catalina came down the road from the dam and slowed at the stop sign, then accelerated across the highway and into Oak Peterson's drive. Ned hadn't yet become accustomed to so many strange cars coming through Center Springs. “Y'all know who that is?”

Jimmy Fox squinted past Ike. “That's John T. West.” He resumed his position. “Most folks don't have any use for him.”

“I don't neither.” Ned said. “He runs with a couple of other no'counts.”

Ty Cobb bit his bottom lip, thinking. “Yeah, I've always thought it was him and Marty Smallwood who was settin' fire to hay barns a few years back.”

Marty's name caught Ned's attention. “That's right.” He stood. “You know, I need to go. See y'all later.”

He dropped heavily into the front seat of his car, slamming the door against the rain and rubbing his tingling scar for a minute. He slowly drove through the puddles in front of the domino hall and across the oil road between it and Oak's store.

He parked alongside John T.'s car and studied the undented front end for a moment before going inside. Unlike Neal Box's store, Oak's business seemed like a dungeon even on sunny days. Where Neal had three large double-hung windows on both sides of the frame building, Oak only had two thin, horizontal windows on the east side, up near the ceiling hanging thick with farm implements. The worn wooden floor sagged in places, and many of the dry goods on the shelves had been there so long they were dusty.

John T. was in the rear, talking to Oak through the iron bars of the post office counter. “Have you seen James Parker's little gal, Pepper?”

Oak shook his head. “Naw, not today. Why'n't you ask James, or Ned?”

“I will when I see 'em. I wanted to warn her away from that Westlake kid.”

“Somebody needs to.” Ned joined him at the post office window. “I ain't seen her today. Why?”

John T.'s face reddened. He moved to face Ned. “Well, uh, I don't think much of that Westlake kid and I think she needs to be careful.”

“I'm all right with that, but I don't know much about you. Where do you live?”

“Down toward Cooper right now.”

Ned's blue eyes took stock of the man in front of him and he didn't like what he saw. “I'd sooner you didn't have anything to do with my grandkids.”

“That's fine, then.”

“Where's your other runnin' buddy you were up here with earlier? What's his name…”

“Freddy.” His eyes narrowed in frustration when he realized he'd done exactly what Ned wanted.

“Yeah, ol' Freddy. Where's he?”

John T. scowled. “Home, I guess. He tried snuff the other day, but it didn't set well with him.”

“Ain't that the truth?”

Oak watched the exchange with one wandering eye through his coke-bottle-thick glasses. His sight was so bad he had to hold objects almost against his nose to read them. Tiring of the subject, he peered at an envelope through the thick lens. “Ned, you want your mail?”

“Probably just duns.”

“Most likely. You need anything else, John T.?”

He started to say something else, but changed his mind. “Nope. I'm gone.” John T. spun on one boot heel.

When he opened the door, James Parker rushed in, shouldering him aside. “Ned!”

The old constable's head snapped around at his son's frightened voice. “What?”

“Pepper's done run off from home.”

“What are you talking about?”

“She left in the night.”

Holding his belly, Ned rushed out the door, followed by James. Ned had no idea what to do first, other than get ahold of Top. He'd know what was going on.

John T. watched them go. With luck, Pepper and Cale would disappear forever, like a lot of kids who ran away from home.

At least he wouldn't have to deal with them.

Unless they returned.

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